Portato

Portato[porˈtaːto] (Italian, past participle of portare, "to carry") in music denotes a smooth, pulsing articulation and is often notated by adding dots under slur markings.

Portato is also known as articulated legato(Blood 2012).It is a bowing technique for stringed instruments (Anon. 2001), in which successive notes are gently re-articulated while being joined under a single continuing bow stroke. It achieves a kind of pulsation or undulation, rather than separating the notes. It has been notated in various ways. One early 19th century writer, Pierre Baillot (L’art du violon, Paris, 1834), gives two alternatives: a wavy line, and dots under a slur. Later in the century a third method became common: placing "legato" dashes (tenuto) under a slur (Wall 2001a). The notation with dots under slurs is ambiguous, because it is also used for very different bowings, including staccato and flying spiccato (Walls 2001a; Walls 2001b).

Currently, mezzo-staccato is sometimes indicated in words, by "mezzo-staccato" or "non-legato"; or can be shown by three graphic forms:

Empty Room

I thought I wanted it this wayI thought I really meant the words that I saidI had so many reasons in my headBut all I really needed was a little time and spaceThat was just a phaseNow its an empty roomWithout you, without youIt's an empty room to come home, to come home toIt's an empty room without you, without youAnd this empty roomJust isn't home, it isn't home without youWell I guess I'm out of sortsYeah, I must have been completely out of my headCause I feel like I'm a stranger in my own bedAnd all the walls and ornaments they seem to offend meWon't you forgive me?I thought I wanted this wayI thought I really meant the words that I saidI had so many reasons in my headBut all I really needed was a little time and space